How We’re Working to Protect the World’s Oceans for Future Generations

When marine ecologist, and Marine Conservation Institute founder, Dr. Elliott Norse began working in marine conservation in 1978, policy makers assumed that oceans were generally “in good shape.” By 1990, leading marine scientists knew that the oceans were far more threatened than formerly believed. This led Elliott to publish Global Marine Biological Diversity in 1993, the world’s most-cited book on marine conservation. To encourage more scientists to apply their understanding to marine conservation decision-making, he started Marine Conservation Biology Institute in 1996 (which became Marine Conservation Institute in 2011). This year we celebrate our 20th birthday!

To launch the new interdisciplinary science of marine conservation biology, Marine Conservation Institute held the world’s first two symposia in 1997 and 2001, the forerunner of the Society for Conservation Biology’s International Marine Conservation Congress – now the most important international meeting for marine conservation professionals.

Educating Policy Makers and Driving Change

To educate policy makers about the concerns of marine conservation experts we issued Troubled Waters: A Call for Action, in 1998. Signed by 1,605 scientists, the call for action declared that the world’s oceans are imperiled and urged nations to act immediately. This unprecedented statement of concern made news around the world. That same year, our scientific paper comparing bottom trawling to forest clear-cutting catalyzed the global movement to limit trawling and is the world’s most-cited paper on this topic.

Our organization’s focus is bridging the gap between scientists who understand marine ecosystems and policy makers who determine their fate. In 2000, at our urging, President Clinton called for a national system of marine protected areas. And, in 2006 and 2009, we persuaded President George W. Bush to establish three colossal marine protected areas in the biologically rich, tropical Pacific Ocean. The designation of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument was a game-changer for marine conservation. It marked the first time a vast area (> 100,000 sq km) of the ocean was strongly protected from fishing – the most significant impact humans have on ocean ecosystems – and other extractive and damaging activities. This started a global movement by countries to designate very large and strongly protected marine ecosystems (there are now over a dozen of these marine protected areas globally).

Success in the Oceans

The U.S. now protects huge areas within its central Pacific territories, but additional work is needed to safeguard other regions of the U.S. Tracking the progress of the U.S. as well as other countries in protecting their coastal and marine areas, is now a major focus of our organization. MPAtlas.org, the world’s most comprehensive marine protected area database, is our interactive tool to examine marine protected area coverage and provide data for our analyses and reports examining conservation and protection of the ocean. Our most recent publication SeaStates G20 examined the progress of the largest economies to protect their nation’s waters.

Joe Platko

After helping establish marine conservation biology as a vibrant science worldwide, Marine Conservation Institute turned our full attention to winning protection for the oceans’ best places. As before, we embraced this new focus with passion, commitment, and determination.

To lead this new direction, we launched a major initiative: the Global Ocean Refuge System (GLORES). GLORES is designed to catalyze strong protection for 30 percent of the ecosystems in each marine biogeographic region of the world’s oceans by 2030, enough to avert mass extinction. As always, we will call upon our decades of experience in marine science and policy work as we work to protect marine life and healthy oceans for us and future generations.

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